The referee appointed to sell in an action to foreclose a mortgage moves for an order-directing the plaintiff to pay the referee’s fees and disbursements. The referee was appointed to sell the property embraced in this action by a judgment entered on August 2, 1912. On August 6, 1912, publication of the notice of sale to be made on August twenty-ninth was begun. The notice of sale was sent to the papers through an advertising agency by one of the counsel for the plaintiff, but not the counsel who argues this motion. On August tenth the referee sent a letter to the Law Journal stating that he had never seen the original of the notice of sale which was being published in that paper, or had anything to do with it or with the selection of the date, etc., and that he repudiated it. The counsel for the plaintiff who furnished the notice of sale to the advertising agency asserts that prior to preparing and furnishing such notice he was called on the telephone by some one representing himself to be the referee, who stated that he had seen a published list of referees and that he was the referee named to sell in the case and was arranging for an absence and wanted information as to the probable date of sale, etc., and that the counsel answered him that the date could be yarned in a day or two, and that he, the counsel, would prepare and insert the notice of sale, and that the referee acquiesced in this arrangement. It is significant that the counsel does not say that he asked the referee what auctioneer should be selected, or what newspaper, or even what day of the week. The referee denies ever having had any such telephonic interview. Thereafter an agreement was made between the referee and the plaintiff’s counsel that the notice as prepared and inserted by the counsel would be recognized and acted upon by the referee and that the commissions for the advertising should be transferred on the books
Ordered accordingly.
